Deconstructing white-tailed deer forage selection: the role of plant
chemistry and volatile scent signaling
Abstract
When foraging optimally, mammalian herbivores should select food items
that confer the greatest nutritional benefits (such as crude protein and
non-structural carbohydrates) and impose minimal to no costs. Many
plants defend themselves from herbivores by producing plant secondary
metabolites (PSMs) that defend against herbivores. PSMs, such as
tannins, deter herbivores by providing post-ingestive feedback cues that
the forager experiences after a plant is consumed, and are therefore
difficult for herbivores to avoid altogether. However, some PSMs such as
terpenes are also volatile organic compounds (VOCs) that become gaseous
at ambient temperatures and can be detected by herbivores via scent
prior to ingestion. PSMs that can be detected prior to ingestion prevent
herbivores from consuming a plant to begin with, and enable herbivores
to avoid incurring costs while foraging. Our objective was to discern if
the foraging preferences of white-tailed deer, a near ubiquitous
herbivore in North America, were influenced by the nutritional (crude
protein and non-structural carbohydrates) or anti-nutritional (tannin
and polyphenol) constituents of trees during summer and winter. We also
determined if the VOCs that were emitted by trees influenced the forage
selection of deer by providing pre-ingestive cues. During summer, we
found that deer preferred trees with a high non-structural carbohydrate
content. During winter, deer preferred trees with a low crude protein
content and a high tannin content. After sniffing trees that emitted a
large proportion of monoterpenes and sesquiterpenes, deer were averse to
begin foraging. In the few instances when deer foraged trees with high
terpene contents, they consumed less than they did from low terpene
trees. Our results suggest that VOCs, a long overlooked aspect of
foraging ecology, may play a larger role in determining which plant
species herbivores will avoid than the nutritional and anti-nutritional
constituents of plants.